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Naughtiest Girls, Go Girls, and Glitterbombs: Exploding Schoolgirl Fictions

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posted on 2019-01-01, 00:00 authored by Lucinda McKnightLucinda McKnight
In this chapter I consider the white British and Australian schoolgirl through a notionally comparative study of Enid Blyton’s The Naughtiest Girl in the School (1940–1952) series and the contemporary Go Girl (2005–2012) series, texts spanning my lived experience as girl, mother, and teacher. Through incendiary fragments of memory and media, I, as researcher/writer, seek the girl addressed by these texts and consider the struggles, denials, and ambivalences that produce and are produced by reading the schoolgirl. This girl resists historical determinism, coalescing as contemporaneous past, present, and future as the reader performs her own girlhood through reading and writing. This creative analytical article notices the visual and physical manifestations of texts, as well as their linguistic discourses. Through this work, we perceive postfeminist entanglement in the ongoing re-configuration of the schoolgirl, with implications for policy and practice in education and for cultural and girlhood studies.

History

Title of book

The girl in the text

Chapter number

1

Pagination

13 - 28

Publisher

Berghahn Books

Place of publication

New York, N.Y.

ISBN-13

9781789203233

Language

eng

Notes

This work is being adapted from the journal article of the same name, published in a special issue of Girlhood Studies in 2017 for inclusion in an expanded edited book.

Publication classification

B1 Book chapter

Copyright notice

2019, The Author

Extent

14

Editor/Contributor(s)

A Smith

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